Depends on what your BAC was at the beginning of the 24 hour period, and that state of your liver.
.10
7 Hours, 30 minutes. 7 1/2 hours. Top one?
7 hours and 30 minutes is 7.5 hours.
7 hours, 24 minutes
range 10-18 BAC
A simple way to calculate your BAC is with the following equation APPROXIMATE FORMULA: BAC=(drinks/2)*(Gender_Constant/Weight) - 0.016*Hours. Where 'drinks' is the number of drinks you have had, the 'Gender Constant' is 9.0 for men and 7.5 for women, 'Weight' is your weight in lbs and 'Hours' is how many hours you have been drinking. Following this equation we see that your body is able to reduce your BAC by 0.016 per every hour, thus if a male of weight 150lbs had 6 drinks in an hour their BAC would be 0.1639. If the same person had the same amount of drinks but spaced them out to 3 hours his BAC would be 0.132. That is why it is recommended that you space out your drinking. !!!!!!!!IMPORTANT: THIS IS AN APPROXIMATE EQUATION. DO NOT BASE YOUR DRINKING ON THIS EQUATION!!!!!!!!!!
If you drink a lot of drinks, say 6-7 in a 1 1/2 hour period of time, then your BAC might be too high for sensitive activities.
That depends on when you had the drinks, how much you ate recently, what the drinks actually were and how fast you drank them.
Depends on the individual.
0.06
0.08 BAC. Note : Most adults get 0.08 after just 2-3 Drinks.
24 hr and a coffee
Alcohol is metabolized at about .015 of BAC per hour. Thus it takes a little over four hours to return to no BAC.
That depends entirely on the BAC level, which drops at about .015 of BAC per hour.
No. It usually takes one hour per drink to leave your system, so 5 drinks would take five hours to leave your system completely. Although the caffeine in the coffee may help you feel more alert, it will not lower your BAC.
For a normal person with a healthy liver, alcohol is metabolized at around 0.02% BAC per hour. One drink, depending on body mass, is about 0.02% BAC, so one drink would take one hour to clear, five drinks would take five hours to clear, etc.